Papers by Elizabeth Groppe
Climate for Change: What the Church Can Do About Global Warming
International Journal of Christianity & Education, 2014
Humility, the keystone of the virtues in the Christian spiritual tradition, has been dismissed by... more Humility, the keystone of the virtues in the Christian spiritual tradition, has been dismissed by modern philosophers, critiqued by feminist theologians, and overpowered by our industrial and technological culture. The incorporation of agricultural experience in Christian higher education presents the opportunity to cultivate anew the virtue of humility, properly understood not as a practice of self-abnegation but as a relation of the creature to the God who has gifted us with nourishing soil and deified us in Christ.
Forging New Paths of Shalom: Cardinal Kasper's Contributions to Catholic-Jewish Relations
Revisiting Vatican II's Theology of the People of God after Forty-Five Years of Catholic-Jewish Dialogue
The Tri-Unity of God and the Fractures of Human History
"This Is My Body": The Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist and the Call to Be Peacemakers
Teshuva and Torah: Christian-Jewish Partnership as a New Horizon for Biblical Interpretation
Holy Things from a Holy People: Judaism and the Christian Liturgy
After Augustine: Humility and the Search for God in Historical Memory
The Spirit and the Church in a World at War: The Challenge and Promise of Nonviolent Action

Theological Studies, 2001
The author highlights one of the primary contributions of Yves Congar's pneumatology. In contrast... more The author highlights one of the primary contributions of Yves Congar's pneumatology. In contrast to early-20th-century Roman Catholic theology that divorced reflection on the indwelling of the Holy Spirit in the human person from a systematic ecclesiology, Congar developed a theology of personal indwelling that was inseparable from a theology of the Church. The author then illustrates the fruitfulness of Congar's approach by using his theology constructively to address the postconciliar discussion as to whether the Catholic Church is a hierarchy or a democracy.] F RENCH DOMINICAN YVES CONGAR (1904 expressed a desire to be an Aeolian harp upon which the Spirit of God would blow, releasing harmonious melodies. 1 His life of dedicated prayer, service, and scholarship were all signs of his fidelity to this calling. Indeed, Congar was not only an instrument of the Spirit of God, but also a theologian of the Spirit. Years before pneumatology became a prominent topic in Roman Catholic theology, he was addressing the theology of the Holy Spirit in many of his books and articles. 2 This work culminated in the three volume I Believe in the Holy Spirit and the subsequent monograph The Word and the Spirit. 3
The Practice of Theology as Passion for Truth: Testimony from the Journals of Yves Congar, O.P
Horizons, 2004
Catherine Mowry LaCugna's God for Us: The Trinity and Christian Life (1991) constitutes a paradig... more Catherine Mowry LaCugna's God for Us: The Trinity and Christian Life (1991) constitutes a paradigm shift in present-day trinitarian theology. LaCugna was convinced that the standard paradigm of the economic and immanent Trinity was fraught with a variety of limitations. She offered as an alternative framework the principle of the inseparability of theologia and oikonomia, and within this structure she developed a relational ontology of persons-in-communion. Her approach is a major contribution to the present renewal of the doctrine of the Trinity.]
Books by Elizabeth Groppe
Yves Congar's Theology of the Holy Spirit
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Papers by Elizabeth Groppe
Books by Elizabeth Groppe